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Demand for voluntary carbon offsets holds strong

Volume increased at least 6 percent in 2019, buoyed by corporate commitments. Read More

(Updated on July 24, 2024)

The article originally appeared on Ecosystem Marketplace, a Forest Trends Initiative.

The forward-looking section of 2019’s State of Voluntary Carbon Markets report began with the prophetic statement that “demand for voluntary carbon offsets will grow [in 2020] as the world finally begins to address the climate challenge.”

The next paragraph began, “Airlines will lift demand.”

Well, the COVID-19 pandemic grounded that industry but a broader and deeper legion of businesses, many of which never had engaged in the climate challenge before, stepped up with commitments that involved a degree of offsetting. As a result, 2020 looks set to outpace the strong 2019, when volume topped 100 million metric tons of greenhouse gas abatement, according to “Voluntary Carbon and the Post-Pandemic Recovery,” the first installment of the 2020 State of Voluntary Carbon Markets report.

Released to coincide with New York Climate Week, the report is available on the Ecosystem Marketplace Carbon Hub and includes a summary of data from 2019 as well as market sentiment for 2020 garnered from interviews with two dozen market participants. It also outlines findings that will be fleshed out in subsequent installments.

2019 findings

Most voluntary offsets are transacted bilaterally, with no centralized repository for price and volume data, and Ecosystem Marketplace gathers this fragmented data by reaching out to all known market participants individually — first via a survey that has been conducted annually since 2005, then via interviews with a representative group of participants. As a result, there is a lag in presenting data, balanced with interview findings that are quite current and have proven accurate over time.

The 2020 survey focused on 2019 transactions, and it identified a near-record volume equivalent to 104 million metric tons of carbon dioxide either removed or prevented from entering the atmosphere. This is a 6 percent increase over 2018, and the figure may be revised upward as more data becomes available.

Average offset prices remained flat in 2019, but with wide variance by type. Prices for offsets associated with nature-based solutions (NBS) and natural climate solutions price and volume moved in opposite directions for these leading offset types. Agriculture, forestry and other land use (AFOLU) volume dropped 28 percent and renewable energy volume surged by 78 percent.

Despite the lower volume, the market value of AFOLU offsets was more than twice that of renewable energy, and demand for offsets associated with forest management in developing countries (such as REDD+) remains especially strong.

Carbon offset prices 2019

In 2019, the volume of renewable energy transactions exceeded that of nature-based solutions in forestry and land use, but the prices garnered for nature-based solutions averaged more than three times those of renewable energy.

Topsy-turvy 2020

The year opened with a strong tailwind from year-end climate talks in Madrid, but by late March and early April, COVID-19 had spread across the world. Greenhouse-gas emissions plummeted — but only because the economy had ground to a halt, and there was a widespread fear that emissions would spiral upward once the economy recovered. One news outlet declared that “new voluntary corporate climate pledges [were] likely to be put on hold.”

When we conducted a survey of market participants in April, however, we found something astonishing: While participants feared the worst as airlines rolled back their purchases to match lower emissions, broader corporate demand for voluntary carbon offsets was increasing. Then, as the year progressed, so did the number of carbon-neutral pledges from individual companies such as Amazon and Microsoft — pledges that since have proliferated among companies that never had taken climate action before.

In June, the Climate Ambition Alliance launched its “Race to Zero” campaign to encourage countries, companies and other entities to deliver structured carbon-neutral pledges by the end of 2021.

September saw a flurry of activity. Former Bank of England Governor Mark Carney launched a global taskforce to begin scaling up voluntary carbon markets to drive emissions down as quickly as possible. The Science-Based Targets Initiative (SBTi) released its guidance for using offsets as part of a robust corporate emission-reduction program. The guidance contributes to a growing debate over what is and isn’t “carbon neutrality.”

Carbon-free vs. carbon-neutral

At the core of the debate is a fear that companies will use offsets instead of — as opposed to in addition to — internal emission reductions. Many recent high-profile commitments, however, use voluntary offsets as part of a broader emission-reduction strategy, and previous Ecosystem Marketplace surveys have found companies that put a price on carbon tend to be the most aggressive at reducing emissions internally, with offsets serving as a way of deepening reductions.

To take just one example, Google unveiled an accelerated emission-reduction strategy in September that looks a lot like the new SBTi guidance.

The company isn’t a newcomer to the climate space, and it has been offsetting its emissions since 2007, meaning it has been carbon-neutral since 2007, and it dramatically increased its use of renewable energy in 2017 to reduce emissions further.

In September it announced a move beyond carbon neutrality to become carbon-free by 2030, meaning its operations no longer will emit greenhouse gasses. Until it achieves that, Google will continue to offset those emissions it can’t eliminate. It also announced that it quietly had gone carbon-negative, meaning it had used carbon markets to offset more emissions annually than it emits — enough, in fact, that it has erased all legacy emissions generated since its founding in 1998.

Renewable energy flies on its own

Carbon markets historically have been used to finance renewable energy development because the technology was more expensive than traditional energy sources and couldn’t be implemented without carbon finance. This, however, is changing as renewable energy becomes more affordable, which means carbon finance is only needed to implement certain types of projects in some countries. As a result, carbon standards are phasing out their recognition of offsets generated through the provision of renewable energy.

The bulk of low-priced renewable energy offsets are in India and China, and this will be addressed in more detail in a subsequent installment of this report.

Several market participants interviewed for this report also suggested that renewable energy offsets demand could be coming from companies new to carbon markets. New buyers have tended to focus on price over “co-benefits,” such as contribution to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. Co-benefits historically have been a key selling point for AFOLU, and these project types increasingly audit to the SDGs.

We should point out that carbon standards will continue to recognize offsets generated through the development of renewable-energy projects that clearly need carbon finance to exist — such as off-grid projects in middle-income countries and large-scale projects in least- developed nations or conflict zones within medium-income countries.

Turning to the surge in prices and corresponding drop in volume for offsets associated with AFOLU, this appears to be associated with a few high-volume/low-price transactions that took place in 2018 and were not repeated in 2019. Most, if not all, market participants we interviewed saw a maintained trend in favor of nature-based solutions, and demand for offsets associated with AFOLU appears strong in 2020.

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